Chimonanthus Praecox
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"National List of Vascular Plant Species That Occur in Wetlands: 1996 National Summary."
Intro 1996 National List of Vascular Plant Species That Occur in Wetlands The Fish and Wildlife Service has prepared a National List of Vascular Plant Species That Occur in Wetlands: 1996 National Summary (1996 National List). The 1996 National List is a draft revision of the National List of Plant Species That Occur in Wetlands: 1988 National Summary (Reed 1988) (1988 National List). The 1996 National List is provided to encourage additional public review and comments on the draft regional wetland indicator assignments. The 1996 National List reflects a significant amount of new information that has become available since 1988 on the wetland affinity of vascular plants. This new information has resulted from the extensive use of the 1988 National List in the field by individuals involved in wetland and other resource inventories, wetland identification and delineation, and wetland research. Interim Regional Interagency Review Panel (Regional Panel) changes in indicator status as well as additions and deletions to the 1988 National List were documented in Regional supplements. The National List was originally developed as an appendix to the Classification of Wetlands and Deepwater Habitats of the United States (Cowardin et al.1979) to aid in the consistent application of this classification system for wetlands in the field.. The 1996 National List also was developed to aid in determining the presence of hydrophytic vegetation in the Clean Water Act Section 404 wetland regulatory program and in the implementation of the swampbuster provisions of the Food Security Act. While not required by law or regulation, the Fish and Wildlife Service is making the 1996 National List available for review and comment. -
Outline of Angiosperm Phylogeny
Outline of angiosperm phylogeny: orders, families, and representative genera with emphasis on Oregon native plants Priscilla Spears December 2013 The following listing gives an introduction to the phylogenetic classification of the flowering plants that has emerged in recent decades, and which is based on nucleic acid sequences as well as morphological and developmental data. This listing emphasizes temperate families of the Northern Hemisphere and is meant as an overview with examples of Oregon native plants. It includes many exotic genera that are grown in Oregon as ornamentals plus other plants of interest worldwide. The genera that are Oregon natives are printed in a blue font. Genera that are exotics are shown in black, however genera in blue may also contain non-native species. Names separated by a slash are alternatives or else the nomenclature is in flux. When several genera have the same common name, the names are separated by commas. The order of the family names is from the linear listing of families in the APG III report. For further information, see the references on the last page. Basal Angiosperms (ANITA grade) Amborellales Amborellaceae, sole family, the earliest branch of flowering plants, a shrub native to New Caledonia – Amborella Nymphaeales Hydatellaceae – aquatics from Australasia, previously classified as a grass Cabombaceae (water shield – Brasenia, fanwort – Cabomba) Nymphaeaceae (water lilies – Nymphaea; pond lilies – Nuphar) Austrobaileyales Schisandraceae (wild sarsaparilla, star vine – Schisandra; Japanese -
Native Plants for Your Backyard
U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service Native Plants for Your Backyard Native plants of the Southeastern United States are more diverse in number and kind than in most other countries, prized for their beauty worldwide. Our native plants are an integral part of a healthy ecosystem, providing the energy that sustains our forests and wildlife, including important pollinators and migratory birds. By “growing native” you can help support native wildlife. This helps sustain the natural connections that have developed between plants and animals over thousands of years. Consider turning your lawn into a native garden. You’ll help the local environment and often use less water and spend less time and money maintaining your yard if the plants are properly planted. The plants listed are appealing to many species of wildlife and will look attractive in your yard. To maximize your success with these plants, match the right plants with the right site conditions (soil, pH, sun, and moisture). Check out the resources on the back of this factsheet for assistance or contact your local extension office for soil testing and more information about these plants. Shrubs Trees Vines Wildflowers Grasses American beautyberry Serviceberry Trumpet creeper Bee balm Big bluestem Callicarpa americana Amelanchier arborea Campsis radicans Monarda didyma Andropogon gerardii Sweetshrub Redbud Carolina jasmine Fire pink Little bluestem Calycanthus floridus Cercis canadensis Gelsemium sempervirens Silene virginica Schizachyrium scoparium Blueberry Red buckeye Crossvine Cardinal flower -
Asian Journal of Chemistry Asian Journal of Chemistry
Asian Journal of Chemistry; Vol. 26, No. 14 (2014), 4445-4448 ASIAN JOURNAL OF CHEMISTRY http://dx.doi.org/10.14233/ajchem.2014.16897 Chemical Composition, Antifungal Activity and Toxicity of Essential Oils from the Leaves of Chimonanthus praecox Located at Two Different Geographical Origin † † * * * REN-YI GUI , WEI-WEI LIANG , SHENG-XIANG YANG , LI LLU and JIAN-CHUN QIN College of Plant Science, Jilin University, Changchun, Jilin 130062, P.R. China; The Nurturing Station for the State Key Laboratory of Subtropical Silviculture; Zhejiang Provincial Key Laboratory of Chemical Utilization of Forestry Biomass, Zhejiang A&F University, Lin'an, Zhejiang 311300, P.R. China *Corresponding authors: E-mail: [email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected] †Contributed equally to this study Received: 19 December 2013; Accepted: 24 February 2014; Published online: 5 July 2014; AJC-15493 The composition of the essential oils obtained by hydrodistillation of different geographical origin of Chimonanthus praecox, including Hangzhou and Wenzhou samples, were investigated by GC/MS. Forty three components comprising 93.05 % of the leave oils from Hangzhou plant, and 32 components comprising 94.26 % of the leave oils from Wenzhou plant were identified. The major components in the leaf oil from Hangzhou samples were (-)-alloisolongifolene (10.20 %), caryophyllene (9.31 %), elixene (8.52 %), germacrene D (7.30 %), germacrene B (7.44 %), δ-cadinene (6.17 %) and β-elemen (4.67 %). While, the oil from Wenzhou samples contained furan, 3-(4,8- dimethyl-3,7-nonadienyl)-, (E)-(21.69 %), eucalyptol (19.02 %), terpilene (12.41 %), p-menth-1-en-8-ol (6.65 %) and geraniol (5.29 %) as the major components. -
State of New York City's Plants 2018
STATE OF NEW YORK CITY’S PLANTS 2018 Daniel Atha & Brian Boom © 2018 The New York Botanical Garden All rights reserved ISBN 978-0-89327-955-4 Center for Conservation Strategy The New York Botanical Garden 2900 Southern Boulevard Bronx, NY 10458 All photos NYBG staff Citation: Atha, D. and B. Boom. 2018. State of New York City’s Plants 2018. Center for Conservation Strategy. The New York Botanical Garden, Bronx, NY. 132 pp. STATE OF NEW YORK CITY’S PLANTS 2018 4 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 6 INTRODUCTION 10 DOCUMENTING THE CITY’S PLANTS 10 The Flora of New York City 11 Rare Species 14 Focus on Specific Area 16 Botanical Spectacle: Summer Snow 18 CITIZEN SCIENCE 20 THREATS TO THE CITY’S PLANTS 24 NEW YORK STATE PROHIBITED AND REGULATED INVASIVE SPECIES FOUND IN NEW YORK CITY 26 LOOKING AHEAD 27 CONTRIBUTORS AND ACKNOWLEGMENTS 30 LITERATURE CITED 31 APPENDIX Checklist of the Spontaneous Vascular Plants of New York City 32 Ferns and Fern Allies 35 Gymnosperms 36 Nymphaeales and Magnoliids 37 Monocots 67 Dicots 3 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY This report, State of New York City’s Plants 2018, is the first rankings of rare, threatened, endangered, and extinct species of what is envisioned by the Center for Conservation Strategy known from New York City, and based on this compilation of The New York Botanical Garden as annual updates thirteen percent of the City’s flora is imperiled or extinct in New summarizing the status of the spontaneous plant species of the York City. five boroughs of New York City. This year’s report deals with the City’s vascular plants (ferns and fern allies, gymnosperms, We have begun the process of assessing conservation status and flowering plants), but in the future it is planned to phase in at the local level for all species. -
Winter Blooming Shrubs by RICHARD E
Winter Blooming Shrubs by RICHARD E. WEAVER, JR. Winters in the eastern part of this country south of Washington, D.C. are seldom as unpleasant as they are here in the Northeast. Of course the temperatures there are less extreme, but for those of us who appreciate plants and flowers, the real difference is perhaps due to the Camellias. Blooming through the worst weather that January and February have to offer, these wonderful plants with their bright and showy blooms make winter something almost worth anticipating. Although there are some hopeful new developments through con- centrated breeding efforts, we in most of the Northeast still must do without Camellias in our gardens. Nevertheless, there are a sur- prising number of hardy shrubs, perhaps less showy but still charm- ing and attractive, that will bloom for us through the winter and the early days of spring. Some, such as the Witch Hazels, are foolproof; others present a challenge for they are susceptible to our capricious winters and may lose their opening flowers to a cold March. For those gardeners willing to take the chance, a few of the best early- flowering shrubs displayed in the border, or as the focal point in a winter garden, will help to soften the harshness of the season. Many plants that bloom in the early spring have their flowers per- fectly formed by the previous fall. Certain of these do not require a period of cold dormancy, and in mild climates will flower intermit- tently during the fall and winter. Most species, however, do require an environmental stimulus, usually a period of cold temperatures, before the buds will break and the flowers open. -
Native Shrubs Are Backbone of Landscapes
used in small groupings. Spicebush NATIVE SHRUBS thrives in full sun but is acceptable in partial sun. It is a good compan- ion to pine or at the edge of a beech- maple-oak woods. It has been re- ARE BACKBONE ported to be difficult to transplant because of the coarse roots but we have had 98% success when plant- OF LANDSCAPES ing in moist, well-drained, sandy loam. During the spring the light green leaves are oblong, 3 to 5 inches in length. This lime-green Allspice, Spicebush, Bayberry, and Snowberry foliage of summer is transformed into a rich yellow during fall. This fall color is spectacular. Spicebush BY DOUGLAS CHAPMAN, "Horticulturist, Dow Gardens, Midland, Ml" flowers very early in the season (late April in Central Michigan). Native shrubs should provide the spring. It grows in a wide range of These thread-like flowers, borne in backbone for home and commer- soil conditions, thriving in moist, clusters near the terminal, are cial landscapes. Four native shrubs well-drained loamy soils but yellowish-green in color. The fruit which thrive when grown in full adapts to well-drained, almost which is scarlet and shaped some- sun or light shade which provide a droughty conditions. It has darker what like raspberries can be spec- real diversity to the landscape in- green leaves during the summer tacular along with the fall foliar clude Carolina Allspice, Spice- months, becoming a pale yellow- color. This native is underused and bush, Northern Bayberry, and green in the fall but does not de- should be grown more in the trade. -
Wood Anatomy of Calycanthaceae Sherwin Carlquist
Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany Volume 10 | Issue 3 Article 6 1983 Wood Anatomy of Calycanthaceae Sherwin Carlquist Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarship.claremont.edu/aliso Part of the Botany Commons Recommended Citation Carlquist, Sherwin (1983) "Wood Anatomy of Calycanthaceae," Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany: Vol. 10: Iss. 3, Article 6. Available at: http://scholarship.claremont.edu/aliso/vol10/iss3/6 ALISO 10(3), 1983, pp. 427-441 WOOD ANATOMY OF CALYCANTHACEAE: ECOLOGICAL AND SYSTEMATIC IMPLICATIONS Sherwin Carlquist INTRODUCTION Wood anatomy of Calycanthaceae has not been studied as a unit. Wood features ofthe family have been summarized by Metcalfe and Chalk (1950); various authors have mentioned one or more traits in studies dealing with Calycanthaceae (e.g., Wilson 1979) or other families (e.g., Garratt 1934). In view of recent interest in Idiospermum australiense (Diels) Blake, a new comparative study is needed. One goal of the present study is clarification of relationships of Idiospermum to Calycanthus and Chimonanthus. Wood anatomy of Idiospermum was described by Blake ( 1972) and Wilson ( 1979); a new description is offered here to provide more quantitative data. De scriptions of the wood of Calycanthus and Chimonanthus provided here incorporate such quantitative data, but also modify earlier descriptions with respect to some important qualitative features. Material of the recently de scribed genus Sinocalycanthus (Cheng and Chan 1964) was not available, although the description of that genus suggests it is not strongly different from Calycanthus or Chimonanthus. The present study incorporates material of Calycanthus floridus L. var. floridus, C. -
Landscaping Without Harmful Invasive Plants
Landscaping without harmful invasive plants A guide to plants you can use in place of invasive non-natives Supported by: This guide, produced by the wild plant conservation Landscaping charity Plantlife and the Royal Horticultural Society, can help you choose plants that are without less likely to cause problems to the environment harmful should they escape from your planting area. Even the most careful land managers cannot invasive ensure that their plants do not escape and plants establish in nearby habitats (as berries and seeds may be carried away by birds or the wind), so we hope you will fi nd this helpful. A few popular landscaping plants can cause problems for you / your clients and the environment. These are known as invasive non-native plants. Although they comprise a small Under the Wildlife and Countryside minority of the 70,000 or so plant varieties available, the Act, it is an offence to plant, or cause to damage they can do is extensive and may be irreversible. grow in the wild, a number of invasive ©Trevor Renals ©Trevor non-native plants. Government also has powers to ban the sale of invasive Some invasive non-native plants might be plants. At the time of producing this straightforward for you (or your clients) to keep in booklet there were no sales bans, but check if you can tend to the planted area often, but it is worth checking on the websites An unsuspecting sheep fl ounders in a in the wider countryside, where such management river. Invasive Floating Pennywort can below to fi nd the latest legislation is not feasible, these plants can establish and cause cause water to appear as solid ground. -
Evaluation of 29 Lisianthus Cultivars (Eustoma Grandiflorum) and One Inbred Line of E
This article is an Advance Online Publication of the authors’ corrected proof. Note that minor changes may be made before final version publication. The Horticulture Journal Preview e Japanese Society for doi: 10.2503/hortj.UTD-151 JSHS Horticultural Science http://www.jshs.jp/ Evaluation of 29 Lisianthus Cultivars (Eustoma grandiflorum) and One Inbred Line of E. exaltatum for Resistance to Two Isolates of Fusarium solani by Using Hydroponic Equipment Takashi Onozaki*, Mamoru Satou**, Mirai Azuma***, Masato Kawabe, Kyoko Kawakatsu and Naoko Fukuta Institute of Vegetable and Floriculture Science, NARO, Tsukuba 305-0852, Japan Fusarium root rot of lisianthus (Eustoma grandiflorum) caused by Fusarium solani is one of the most important and damaging lisianthus diseases. It occurs commonly in Japan and worldwide and causes serious crop losses. However, little effort has been made to breed lisianthus for resistance to this disease. We initiated a breeding program for resistance to F. solani in 2014. Twenty-nine lisianthus cultivars (E. grandiflorum) and one inbred line of Eustoma exaltatum were evaluated for resistance to two isolates (MAFF712388 and MAFF712411) of F. solani, as a first step toward the breeding of resistant cultivars. Seedlings were inoculated following injury by needle, then grown using hydroponic equipment—an efficient and reliable method for evaluating resistance. We found large differences in resistance among the 29 cultivars and the one inbred line tested. ‘Papillon Pink Flash’ was highly resistant to both isolates and showed no disease symptoms in a total of four tests. Furthermore, E. exaltatum Ohkawa No. 1 was highly resistant to isolate MAFF712388, showing no disease symptoms, and resistant to isolate MAFF712411. -
Pollination-Induced Gene Changes That Lead to Senescence in Petunia × Hybrida
Pollination-Induced Gene Changes That Lead to Senescence in Petunia × hybrida DISSERTATION Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University By Shaun Robert Broderick, M.S. Graduate Program in Horticulture and Crop Science The Ohio State University 2014 Dissertation Committee: Michelle L. Jones, Advisor Feng Qu Eric J. Stockinger Esther van der Knaap Copyrighted by Shaun Robert Broderick 2014 Abstract Flower longevity is a genetically programmed event that ends in flower senescence. Flowers can last from several hours to several months, based on flower type and environmental factors. For many flowers, particularly those that are ethylene- sensitive, longevity is greatly reduced after pollination. Cellular components are disassembled and nutrients are remobilized during senescence, which reduces the net energy expenditures of floral structures. The goal of this research is to identify the genes that can be targeted to extent shelf life by inhibiting pollination-induced senescence. Identifying and characterizing regulatory shelf-life genes will enable breeders to incorporate specific alleles that improve post production quality into ethylene-sensitive crops. Petunia × hybrida is particularly amenable to flower longevity studies because of its large floral organs, predictable flower senescence timing, and importance in the greenhouse industry. A general approach to gene functional analysis involves reducing gene expression and observing the resulting phenotype. Viruses, such as tobacco rattle virus (TRV), can be used to induce gene silencing in plants like petunia. We optimized several parameters that improved virus-induced gene silencing (VIGS) in petunia by increasing the consistency and efficiency of silencing. -
PEREGRINO-THESIS-2017.Pdf (6.329Mb)
Biochemical studies in the elucidation of genes involved in tropane alkaloid production in Erythroxylum coca and Erythroxylum novogranatense by Olga P. Estrada, B. S. A Thesis In Chemical Biology Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of Texas Tech University in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of MASTER OF SCIENCES Approved Dr. John C. D’Auria Chair of Committee Dr. David W. Nes Co-chair of Committee Mark Sheridan Dean of the Graduate School May, 2017 Copyright 2017, Olga P. Estrada Texas Tech University, Olga P. Estrada, May 2017 AKNOWLEDGMENTS I would like to thank my mentor and advisor Dr. John C. D’Auria, for providing me with the tools to become a scientist, and offering me his unconditional support. Thanks to the members of the D’Auria lab, especially Neill Kim and Benjamin Chavez for their aid during my experimental studies. And of course, thank you to my family for always giving me the strength to pursue my goals. ii Texas Tech University, Olga P. Estrada, May 2017 TABLE OF CONTENTS AKNOWLEDGMENTS ........................................................................................................... ii ABSTRACT ........................................................................................................................... v LIST OF TABLES ................................................................................................................. vi LIST OF FIGURES ............................................................................................................... vii CHAPTER I .........................................................................................................................